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RENO, Nev. - John Fairfax, the first known person to row alone across the Atlantic Ocean, has died at his Las Vegas-area home at the age of 74.His wife, Tiffany, says the adventurer died Feb. 8 of an apparent heart attack.Fairfax gained international attention in 1969 when he became the first person in recorded history to cross the Atlantic alone by rowboat. He dealt with sharks, storms and exhaustion on the six-month, 5,000-mile journey from the Canary Islands to Florida.In 1972, he and his girlfriend, Sylvia Cook, became the first known people to row across the Pacific Ocean. He survived a shark atta
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stanley cup he unbelievable strength and courage of her husband of 31 years. ponent--type-recirculation .item:nth-child 5 display: none; inline-recirc-item--id-9609f9fe-8c88-11e2-b06b-024c619f5c3d, right-rail-recirc-item--id-9609f9fe-8c88-11e2-b06b-024c619f5c3d display: none; inline-recirc-item--id-9609f9fe-8c88-11e2-b06b-024c619f5c3d ~ .it
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Years ago, I believed experts who said Net Neutrality wasn ;t a big deal for two reasons. First, It never really existed in the first place because many ISPs prioritize traffic in some way, say, for or against online gaming . Second, the free market wou
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stanley cup ause ISPs that threw up bad content roadblocks would be abandoned. The second one is no longer true. There almost no competition for ISPs. Everyone knows this, but I really know it right now, because I am moving and only have one option for non-satellite internet: the regional cable provider. They can do whatever they want to my connection, because I have nowhere else to go. They never have to answer my phonecalls, and they can degrade my service as much as they want. This is the case almost everywhere these days, even in big cities, due to tremendous concentration in the ISP business over the past 20 years. As for number one, well, it looks like we ;re going to find out what happens when ISPs can be more open about doing whatever they want to any kind of traffic, for any reason, because we seem to have decided that the internet isn ;t a public utility like the phone lines through which some of it runs. To some, this means the internet will be broken. Net Neutrality has been struck down here the best explanation we ;ve seen , and if the FCC tries to save it
vaso stanley , according to Susan Crawford, the expert cited by Re/Code she declined to respond to a query for this pie